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On patrol A speedboat and A Su30 jet

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India wants to increase weapon exports by setting up armament plants and representative office of PSU Bharat Electronics Limited (BEL) in Vietnam.

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Vietnam´s new strategy in the South China sea

https://international.thenewslens.com/article/97948

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Vietnam continues modest expansions to its outposts in the Spratly Islands, most recently on Ladd Reef. Satellite imagery from March and June shows that Hanoi has dredged a new channel, which did not exist in older photos, and is expanding one of its two facilities (the other is a small lighthouse to the west) at the feature.

An image from March 18 reveals a channel recently dredged through the southern edge of the reef, with a barge and two large (roughly 160-foot) vessels just north of the mouth of this new entrance into the lagoon. At least 21 smaller ships, all of which appear to be Vietnamese fishing boats, are present inside the lagoon.

A closer look at the barge shows two pieces of construction equipment, likely backhoes or grab dredgers, loading sediment into a waiting vessel after having scooped it off the seabed. This method of dredging is typical of the work Vietnam has undertaken at several of its other occupied features. The Philippines has also started similar work at its facility on Thitu Island. By contrast, China has usually employed suction cutter dredgers in the South China Sea, which can move sediment much more quickly, but at a staggering environmental cost.

The March image also shows that some of that dredged sediment appears to have been deposited next to Vietnam’s small outpost at the northern end of Ladd Reef.

A more recent image taken on June 3 reveals that Vietnam is expanding the northern outpost, building on sediment from the dredged channel. The barge is tied up alongside the construction site, two large ships are visible at the northern end of the channel, and nearly 80 smaller ships both inside and outside the lagoon. Most, if not all, of these seem to be Vietnamese fishing boats.

The new construction involves the installation of a hexagonal platform about 100 feet across. At least one piece of construction equipment, likely a backhoe, is operating on the recently deposited sediment next to this platform. The new structure appears to be identical to expansions built onto four of Vietnam’s other pillbox-like facilities in the Spratlys, at Collins, Lansdowne, Tennent, and Discovery Great Reefs in recent years. Like those expansions, the new building at Ladd will presumably be connected to the existing outpost by a footbridge.

With the new construction at Ladd Reef, Vietnam has made modest upgrades to 21 of its 49 outposts in the Spratlys in recent years. The decision to expand its footprint at Ladd Reef, including with a new channel to facilitate resupply and allow larger vessels to shelter in the lagoon, is of particular interest given recent events.

The construction work at Ladd Reef also highlights an important new aspect of Vietnam’s military doctrine in the South China Sea: the use of fishers as a militia force.

Ladd Reef is the westernmost of the occupied rocks and reefs in the Spratlys. To the southwest lie several undersea banks that China claims as part of the island group despite their being entirely submerged, along with Vietnamese oil and gas blocks that have been the focus of several high-profile spats between Beijing and Hanoi over the last year. Vietnam, the United States, and most of the international community consider that area to be a piece of the continental shelf belonging to Hanoi, but China claims ill-defined “historic rights” to it as part of its “nine-dash line” claim to most of the South China Sea.

Vietnam built a series of small platforms, called “economic, scientific, and technological services stations,” on the underwater banks in the area in the 1980s and 1990s. Despite recent upgrades, those facilities are extremely vulnerable and were reportedly threatened by Beijing as part of its campaign to force Hanoi to abandon oil and gas work in Block 136 last year. This offers one likely motive for Hanoi’s decision to bolster its footprint at nearby Ladd Reef, which could prove valuable as a staging ground for vessels patrolling the outposts and resources to the southeast.

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The construction work at Ladd Reef also highlights an important new aspect of Vietnam’s military doctrine in the South China Sea: the use of fishers as a militia force. China employs a maritime militia consisting of fishers from its coastal provinces to bolster its presence and support operations in contested waters without provoking a military response from others.

Vietnam learned the difficulty of confronting such a militia firsthand during the 2014 standoff over China’s deployment of an oil rig in disputed waters, when Chinese fishing vessels were called upon to protect the rig’s operations. In response, Vietnam has recruited its own fishers to serve in a similar capacity, though to-date they have been less active than their Chinese counterparts. In this case, the large number of fishing vessels present at Ladd Reef throughout the construction process suggest they might be offering protection and support in an official militia capacity.

TNL Editor: David Green
 
Construction starts for India funded Information Technology Institute at Vietnam army university in Nha Trang.

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The Lady - India defense minister - to a visit of Cam Ranh bay, the home base of Vietnam submarine fleet

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Facebook removes Paracel, Spratly Islands from Chinas map at Vietnams request
By Viet Tuan
July 2, 2018 | 11:17 pm GMT+7 Vietnam Express

A map used for Facebook advertising previously showed the islands, which are under Vietnams sovereignty, as part of China.


Social networking giant Facebook has complied with a request by the Vietnamese government regarding a wrongful depiction of its sovereignty.

As of Monday afternoon, a map used for Facebooks advertising tool was found to have completely removed Paracel (Hoang Sa) and Spratly (Truong Sa) Islands in the South China Sea, which Vietnam calls the East Sea.

Previously, the map wrongfully depicted the islands, which are under Vietnams sovereignty, as part of China.

The adjustment was made after Vietnamese information authorities on Sunday issued a request for Facebook to take immediate actions to correct the maps misinformation regarding the islands sovereignty.

Vietnams Authority of Broadcasting and Electronic Information under the Ministry of Information and Communications has confirmed that Facebook had complied with its request in a timely manner.

However Doan Cong Huynh, head of the ministrys Department of Foreign Information Services, said that Facebook would still need to issue an official apology and a statement regarding the correction so that China would not be able to use the incorrect map to back its claim over the islands.

The maps wrongful depiction of Paracel and Sprarly Islands as part of China has reportedly outraged many people in Vietnam, where Facebook is the most popular network with more than 58 million active accounts.

Vietnam has consistently affirmed that it has full legal basis and historical evidence to assert its sovereignty over the Paracel and Spratly Islands.

China seized the Paracel Islands from South Vietnam by force in 1974, and has been illegally occupying a number of reefs in the Spratly Islands since 1988.
 
Fresh graduates from Air Defence Academy in Russia

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Pompeo to visit Vietnam

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Hanoi, July 5 (IANS) US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will visit Vietnam on July 8-9, it was announced here on Thursday.


This will be Pompeo’s first trip to Vietnam after taking office as Secretary of State, said Ngo Toan Thang, vice spokesperson of the Vietnamese Foreign Affairs Ministry.

Pompeo’s visit is expected to help strengthen the strategic partnership in various spheres like politics, diplomacy, economy, trade, national defence and overcoming consequences of the war, Thang was quoted as saying by Xinhua news agency.
 
Still running: US M48 tanks


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New camo

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Meeting with Japan military chief Onodera Itsunori. Vietnam urges Japan to do more in assisting Vietnam military buildup.

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